Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Monday, August
31, 2015
It has emerged that one of the
Muslim youth that allegedly joined the swelling ranks of the dreaded Islamic
State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) is capable of manufacturing bombs.
Abukakar Mohammed, aka Brother,
reportedly used to pick bomb-making tips from his computer to the amazement of
his friends.
He is believed to be resident at
Cow Lane in Accra Central and studied at the Kwame Nkrumah University of
Science and Technology (KNUST) where he obtained First Class in Nuclear Physics.
His father is said to have
collapsed upon hearing that his son had joined the notorious Islamic sect whose
stock-in-trade is public beheading of their opponents or those they regard as
infidels.
He is said to have told the dad
via a text message that they would meet in paradise, reportedly leading to the
man collapsing.
His father is also said to have
even sold his house in order to fund the boy’s education due to his brilliance,
only for Abubakar to turn against him after some years at the university.
He was seen using his laptop to
assemble bombs and detonate them on the computer to the amazement of his
parents.
Attempts to speak to the father
were unsuccessful as he declined to respond.
News about a 25-year-old
graduate, Nazir Nortei Alema, also from KNUST, purportedly joining ISIS
recently spread like wild fire and has attracted both national and
international concern.
The report on the departure of
Nazir Nortei Alema blew off the lid over the ISIS recruitment drive in Ghana.
A key agent allegedly doing the
recruitment for ISIS was identified as Badhan Diallo, believed to be a Guinean,
who was at the University of Ghana but purportedly left to join the terror
grouping a few months ago.
Apart from Alema and Abubakar,
other persons suspected to have joined the terrorists include one Rafik and a
Tema-based lady called Shakira Mohammed, even though other sources claimed the
Muslim youth are joining ISIS in droves and that more than 10 joined in May,
2015 alone - a report still unconfirmed by the National Security.
Islamic Extremists
DAILY GUIDE learnt that there is a group of young Muslims at KNUST who express
extremist views, are always seen together on campus and Nazir Nortei Alema and
Abubakar Mohammed were said to be key members.
They are believed to be living
together in a hostel outside the campus and do not allow anybody to infiltrate
their ranks easily.
Other private Islamic
institutions, especially at the tertiary level, are said to be having students
who exhibit extreme religious tendencies towards people who do not share their
views.
National Security Assurance
The National Security has been
able to confirm the subtle attempt to recruit Muslim youth to join terror cells
in the Middle East, but they have assured that there should be no cause for
alarm.
“There is no reason to fear. The
ISIS recruitment could go up instead of coming down but currently the number of
those who have joined them is only a handful,” National Security Coordinator
Yaw Donkor assured when he met some selected editors in a maiden engagement
since the ISIS story broke.
He admitted that platforms
created on social media were the main means of reaching out to those
subscribing to the ISIS mentality.
Another reason why there should
not be excessive fear about ISIS threat in the country is that “The current
direction is outward. It is only when they are returning here that we should
worry,” he said.
It emerged at the meeting that the
ISIS recruits were believed to travel by land through Niger where the group is
said to have a training camp, before dispatching them to their final
destinations where they carry out their insurgency.
The National Security
Coordinator also confirmed DAILY GUIDE’s exclusive story that
shook the whole country - about Nazir Nortei Alema leaving home to join the
militant organisation.
“I can confirm the DAILY GUIDE story. Nazir and Shakira are gone. We are following
other names,” he said.
Yaw Donkor, exuding a reassuring
confidence as he was supported by the National Security Advisor, Isifu Baba
Kamara, cautioned the media and Ghanaians in general against stereotyping when
dealing with the ISIS issue because “we are all potential recruits.”
He said the issue should not be
limited to the Islamic community because it goes beyond that, adding that even
before matters got to this stage, the National Security Council had undertaken
outreach programmes to alert people about the security threats posed by
religious zealots.
While pointing at the negative
role of social media in the matter under review, he explained that not all
members of such groups share extremist views.
Mr Donkor disclosed that there
is a school in Niger where ISIS recruits undergo preliminary training before
departure to their final destinations.
He pointed out that ISIS disciples
become potential terrorists only when they leave the country, explaining that
when such persons are here little or nothing is known about them until they
depart. Under such circumstances he asked, “What do we do?”
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